Luca Sanzò - Reger: 3 Suites for Viola Solo (2023)
This post was published 2 years ago. Download links are most likely obsolete. If that's the case, try asking the uploader to re-upload.
Album Preview
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz - 505 Mb | WEB FLAC (tracks) - 241 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 124 Mb | Digital booklet | 00:52:03
Classical | Label: Brilliant Classics
Max Reger (1873–1916) is noted for his devotion to Johann Sebastian Bach. In the words of musicologist Massimo Mila, Reger was an “outstanding crafter of chamber music, who loved restoring ancient contrapuntal forms: fugues, passacaglias, chaconnes, suites, etc.” His 3 Suites for Viola Solo Op.131d – completed a year before his death – exemplify this contrapuntal restoration and reinvention. They belong to a collection of works with an ancient feel in the style of Bach (Op.131), which also comprises music for solo violin, for two violins and for cello. The three solo viola suites all emphasise the polyphonic nature of an instrument that to this day is still considered monodic.
Henri Vieuxtemps (1820–1881) was a key exponent of the Franco-Belgian school of advanced virtuoso violin technique and a contributor to the founding of the Russian school. His Capriccio per viola sola Op.55 begins with the instruction Lento, con molta espressione, a character that pervades the entire work. It is packed with rapid virtuosic passages that are challenging both for the left hand and the bow, maintaining a constant dialogue across a range of timbres.
In the 1970s, following years of avant-garde experimentation, the Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020) returned to a more ‘classic’ style, with conventional notation and melodies or small melodic intervals at the heart of his works. This is true of his Cadenza for Solo Viola, written in 1984 for violinist–violist Grigorij Zyslin. It is considered a piece in its own right, despite close links with the Viola Concerto written a year earlier. Although it is notated without indication of metre or bar lines, the cadenza has what could be described as a ‘baroque’ slow–fast–slow structure and is based entirely on a descending half-step.
At the age of 15, Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) was sent to Gresham’s School in Norfolk, where he lived and studied for two years until winning a scholarship to London’s Royal College of Music in 1930. He composed his Elegy for solo viola that year. Discovered only after Britten’s death, it can be seen as a youthful musical reflection and commentary on his miserable boarding school experience. It can be divided into three sections: the first and third are a song of sadness, exhaustion and disappointment; the second an outburst of anger and frustration.
The Élégie for solo viola by Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971), composed in 1944, arguably has the structure of a two-part invention, divided up into exposition, fugue and recapitulation, and the various stages highlight the instrument’s polyphony with echoes of Bach.
Tracklist
01. Reger: Suite No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 131d: I. Molto Sostenuto
02. Reger: Suite No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 131d: II. Vivace
03. Reger: Suite No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 131d: III. Andante Sostenuto
04. Reger: Suite No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 131d: IV. Molto Vivace
05. Reger: Suite No. 2 in D Major, Op. 131d: I. Con moto (Non troppo Vivace)
06. Reger: Suite No. 2 in D Major, Op. 131d: II. Andante
07. Reger: Suite No. 2 in D Major, Op. 131d: III. Allegretto
08. Reger: Suite No. 2 in D Major, Op. 131d: IV. Vivace
09. Reger: Suite No. 3 in E Minor, Op. 131d: I. Moderato
10. Reger: Suite No. 3 in E Minor, Op. 131d: II. Vivace
11. Reger: Suite No. 3 in E Minor, Op. 131d: III. Adagio
12. Reger: Suite No. 3 in E Minor, Op. 131d: IV. Allegro Vivace
13. Vieuxtemps: Capriccio, Op. 55 (No. 9 Op.Posth) - Hommage à Paganini
14. Penderecki: Cadenza per viola Sola
15. Britten: Elegy
16. Stravinsky: Élégie, K072
Quick check before we show the links
Helps us keep automated scrapers from hammering the filehosts.
